|

|
| Tu Guangshao, vice chairman of the China
Securities Regulatory Commission, speaks as part of a panel at the World
Economic Forum China Business Summit in Beijing yesterday.(Photo: China
Daily) |
BEIJING, Sept. 12 -- China is committed
to speeding up the development and opening up of its capital markets, but the
government prefers a gradual approach to achieving the objective, a securities
regulator said yesterday.
"The development of capital markets cannot be done in
a day," said Tu Guangshao, executive vice chairman of the China Securities
Regulatory Commission.
"It is a long term effort and a systematic project
along with the country's economic development and reform of the financial
sector," he said.
According to Tu, shortcuts to the development of the
market cannot support sustainable growth without first building a market
structure, mechanism and regulatory foundations.
"The reform of the capital markets needs to rest on a
wider foundation," he said, adding more should be done to perfect the country's
legal system, property system, corporate governance and even business culture,
in addition to developing the market itself.
Ed K. Smith, global chief operating officer and
assurance strategy leader for PricewaterhouseCoopers, United Kingdom, agreed
that to be effective, securities reforms must follow a step-by-step process.
Policy makers need to focus on "reputation, ease of
access, ease of exit, ability to do transactions and the implications of
currency restrictions," he said.
"We have accomplished a great deal, but compared with
mature markets, there is still a lot to be done," said Smith, speaking at the
World Economic Forum China Business Summit.
Smith is confident that capital markets
can make progress if the reforms stick to the right path that is building a market
mechanism and reducing government interference.
According to Smith, the government is attaching great
importance to the development of capital markets and has made efforts to achieve
the goal.
"During the past few years, we have adopted reforms
including the amendment of the securities law and share reform, which is still
undergoing, to develop the capital markets," he said.
In addition, China has not only met, but outdone its
commitment to the World Trade Organization in terms of opening up its capital
markets.
"The government is committed to further opening up
the securities industry," said Tu.
The government is currently reviewing its previous
opening moves, to check which sectors have benefited and which need further
help.
In June, UBS won preliminary approval to invest 200
million U.S. dollars in state-owned Beijing Securities, the first deal giving a
foreign firm control of a mainland securities brokerage.
In addition, the ongoing restructure of the
securities industry will be completed either by the end of this year or early
next year, which will create a more favorable environment to open up the
sector.
Tu said China is willing to allow competition in the
securities market.
"China has learned from previous experience in
developing the brokerage industry that competition and opening up is essential
for the industry to develop in a sustainable way," he said.
Before 2005, China had 130 securities companies that
the industry watchdog initially hoped to develop through administrative
protection.
However, 30 brokerages have been closed or gone
bankrupt.
"Administrative protection will not lead to the
growth of the securities industry," said Tu.
(Source: China
Daily)